Love Me Tonight

1932

Comedy / Musical / Romance

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Myrna Loy Photo
Myrna Loy as Countess Valentine
Maurice Chevalier Photo
Maurice Chevalier as Maurice
C. Aubrey Smith Photo
C. Aubrey Smith as Duke d'Artelines
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
814.31 MB
988*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 28 min
P/S ...
1.48 GB
1472*1072
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 28 min
P/S 0 / 1

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by jotix10010 / 10

Isn't it romantic?

Without a doubt, this is a film that should be seen by more people as it was way ahead of its times! The film is helped by the magnificent direction of Rouben Mamoulian, who knew a thing, or two, about how to create movies that endured the passage of time. The film has the magnificent score by Rodgers and Hart, the leading geniuses of the American musical theater.

The picture is a joy to watch from the beginning. The opening sequence in Paris, as people go about their daily routine, ending with Maurice arriving at his own tailor shop is amazing. The story is pure fantasy, but it serves the movie well. The time where this movie was made had a different feel and there was an innocent air surrounding the magic the new talking pictures that were coming out in the early 30s.

The casting proves to be also excellent. Maurice Chevalier, who was an idol in France, made it big in America. He had a personality that put a good feeling to any character he played. Jeannette McDonald, the leading lady was a favorite of the movie going public and it's easy to see why she was adored.

Also a young and fresh Mirna Loy, joins Charles Ruggles and Charles Butterworth in the supporting roles.

This film should be included in any collection of the discriminating movie fan.

Reviewed by bkoganbing10 / 10

"The Sonovagun Is Nothing But A Tailor"

There have been better film directors than Rouben Mamoulian and better stage directors as well. But no one has yet mastered both of those mediums so much so that his services to helm a project was in demand consistently in Broadway and Hollywood. Mamoulian certainly has his share of duds on both coasts, but he has his share of classics as well and none is more classic than Love Me Tonight.

Love Me Tonight is the third and best collaboration with leads Maurice Chevalier and Jeanette MacDonald. Chevalier is but a poor tailor, the best at his craft who's just completed a big order for a rakish nobleman played by Charlie Ruggles. Ruggles is also a deadbeat who's stiffed half the merchants of Paris and they've appointed Chevalier a committee of one to settle the accounts. Off goes Chevalier to the countryside to get Ruggles to cough up.

Ruggles is mooching off his titled uncle C. Aubrey Smith and while nobility has been formally abolished in France, it's still held in regard in class conscious Europe. When Maurice gets to Smith's palatial digs, he also finds another cousin in Jeanette MacDonald and she falls big for him of course. And Ruggles not wanting to seem more of a deadbeat and a moocher than C. Aubrey Smith already thinks he is, introduces Chevalier as another titled fellow.

Two other main characters get into this mix. Charles Butterworth who is also a titled person and would like to marry Jeanette. Of course Butterworth isn't her romantic ideal, like he'd be anybody's. And Jeanette has a lady in waiting in Myrna Loy who's also got her eye on Maurice.

There are many who consider this the best musical ever made. It certainly was years ahead of its time. In fact Maurice and Jeanette were fortunate to also have Ernst Lubitsch directing their other features because they too were considered way ahead of their time and helped their careers along immensely.

One reason for the success of Love Me Tonight is the score written by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart, probably their best film score. When you've got such classics as Isn't It Romantic, Lover, and Mimi all in the same film, you can't miss.

One should also hear Chevalier's RCA recording of Mimi. It was one of the staple songs of his career. The record however has an interlude as Maurice reminisces about all the other girls he's sung about like Louise, Valentina, Mitzi, and his fabulous Love Parade. But no doubt about it, Mimi tops them all. I wish he could have used those lyrics in the film.

As for Lover this is a case of a hit song becoming far bigger in revival. Jeanette sings it on screen, but I would safely venture that more people identify the song with Peggy Lee and hit record she made of it in the Fifties. In fact a lot of her contemporaries also started recording it during that decade and Lover had a new burst of popularity then.

What amazes me about Rouben Mamoulian is that here was a man who directed such things as Oklahoma, Carousel, Lost In The Stars and Porgy and Bess on stage and then could go to the screen and do classics like Love Me Tonight, Blood and Sand, The Mark Of Zorro, and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. This man had a complete sense of the cinema, if you find any staged awkwardness in any of his films, I'm not aware of it. The staging of Isn't It Romantic where Maurice and all his neighbors and friends join in and then switching to Jeanette expressing her longing for real romance is perfect. As is the hunting scene which is something that could never be contemplated doing on stage. And Maurice saving the stag probably got him a lifetime appreciation award from PETA.

Love Me Tonight after almost 80 years still holds up well and it's a great opportunity for young people today to see and appreciate the lost art of the film musical.

Reviewed by MartinHafer8 / 10

a lot of fun provided you like or can tune out the singing of Jeanette MacDonald

Okay, there is a definite trend here. This is about the 6th Jeanette MacDonald movie I have reviewed and once again, I see her as the weakest aspect of the film. Now I know she has fans out there who ADORE her high-pitched screeching, but I do not nor would most film buffs of the 21st century. So, if she's in a movie, I usually avoid it unless it stars others I really like--such as Clark Gable or Maurice Chevalier (who is in this movie). Her singing style is simply hoary and outmoded ("hoary" means OLD, not slutty by the way).

I decided to watch this movie because I saw another MacDonald/Chevalier musical (THE MERRY WIDOW) recently and really liked most of it--it was a very cute and well-made Lubitsch film. Well, while I didn't like this movie quite as much, it was sure close to the other in quality so they both get a score of 8. Why did I like it despite its high "MacDonald" quotient? Well, Maurice Chevalier may not have been a great actor, but his singing is very pleasant and he has a nice screen presence in the film. Plus, some of the songs are actually funny and enjoyable to those, like me, that usually don't like musicals.

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